Tuesday

17-06-2025 Vol 19

Rwanda’s refugees should not be forced to return

 [Since 1994, the world witnesses the horrifying Tutsi minority (14%) ethnic domination, the Tutsi minority ethnic rule with an iron hand, tyranny and corruption in Rwanda. The current government has been characterized by the total impunity of RPF criminals, the Tutsi economic monopoly, the Tutsi militaristic domination, and the brutal suppression of the rights of the majority of the Rwandan people (85% are Hutus)and mass arrests of Hutus by the RPF criminal organization =>AS International]

Le prophète Esaïe s’est écrié:

“Sourds, écoutez! Aveugles, regardez et voyez! “

 

Rwanda’s refugees should not be forced to return

A “cessation clause” invoked by the UN could remove protections for many of the world’s 100,000 Rwandan refugees.



Yoletta
Nyange is a Rwandan-born journalist who has lived and worked across
several countries including UK, Venezuela, Tunisia, Ethiopia and the
Sudans, covering international affairs.

Paul Kagame came to power in 1994 when the Rwandan Patriotic Front captured the capital, Kigali
On June 30, roughly 100,000 Rwandan refugees around the world lost their refugee status and could become stateless if they do not return to Rwanda.
Arguing
that Rwandan refugees no longer have a reasonable fear of persecution
if they return, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has invoked a “cessation clause” applying to Rwandans who fled their country before December 31, 1998.
The
clause essentially frees host countries from their economic, political
and ethical duty to provide sanctuary and services to refugees. As a
result, Rwandan refugees fear 
losing their food ration cards, having their children expelled from school, being fired from their jobs, and being pushed into the abyss of statelessness.
Rwandan
refugees aren’t the only ones to have been affected by cessation
clauses, which have been applied to 26 other nationalities in the past.
With
the clause in effect, refugees face three options: voluntarily
repatriate to Rwanda, appeal or challenge the cessation clause to stay
in their host country, or apply for asylum again in a third country.
Letter from my Child – Rwanda: Children of Bad Memories
The
UNHCR maintains that it only implements such clauses after ensuring
that human rights and general conditions in the refugees’ countries of
origin have improved and calls these “ceased circumstances”. The agency
sees the cessation clause as part of a long-term 
strategy to push states to commit to lasting solutions.
States
are free to choose whether to implement the cessation clause, but are
encouraged to put in place certain procedures to transition refugees to
alternative statuses such as 
local integration programmes. Thankfully, countries such as the Democratic Republic of CongoZambia and South Africa have defended the status of Rwandan refugees living there.
Yet although life may have become better for some refugees who have returned home, Rwanda is still one of the least peaceful nations in
the world: according to the Institute for Economics and Peace’s 2013
Global Peace Index, the country ranks 135 out of 162 states.
Accordingly, many Rwandan refugees view this cessation clause as a scam, a global fraud of unprecedented scale. It adds insults to their injuries and should be revoked.

Rwandans and Paul Kagame

In
April 1994, after a plane carrying the Rwandan and Burundian presidents
was shot down, killing both men, members of Rwanda’s Hutu majority
launched a genocidal campaign that resulted in the deaths of more than
half a million people of both Tutsi and Hutu ethnicities.

By
the time the Rwandan Patriotic Front, an ethnic Tutsi army led by Paul
Kagame, captured the Rwandan capital, half the country’s population had
fled, fearing for their lives. More than 800,000 Hutu crossed into Congo
within four days, one of the largest and fastest refugee exoduses in
modern times.

But
Rwanda’s new masters did not want to rule over ghost towns, and needed a
sizeable portion of the refugees to return. As a result, the government
tried to reassure Hutu refugees that the worst was over, creating the
narrative: “Rwandans are one, there are no problems in Rwanda – and
please come back.” 
Rwandans
are one indeed. Yet under the rule of Kagame – who has served as
Rwanda’s president since the RPF’s triumph in 1994 – ethnic Hutus have
been cruelly mistreated by the government, subjected todeportationintimidation, and detention
. The government’s passing of a law in 2004 banning ethnic
distinctions – discussing the topic in a manner deemed provocative can
even result in jail time – has had the effect of granting only a handful
the right to grieve from a collective pain afflicting Rwanda. The
cessation clause is only the latest chapter in this agony.
Kagame – or the “Darling Dictator”, as a New York Times op-ed referred to
him – has built his credentials on the heroic tale of having stopped
the Tutsi genocide and sending the Hutu “genocidaires” into exile. The
president’s story has been that those who do not want to live in Rwanda
have a dark, ugly past to hide and are running away from prosecution.
While it cannot be ruled out that some genocide perpetrators may have
quietly resettled abroad, it does not justify branding all refugees and
their unborn children as criminals on the run. 

The
Rwandan government has come to realise that casting all exiles as
‘genocidaires’ was clumsy and deeply harmful to its attempt to brand
itself as a business-friendly ‘Singapore of Africa’.
The
fact is that Rwandans living inside and outside the country are
overwhelmingly Hutu, and are part and parcel of the country’s fabric.
Rwanda’s exiles cannot be discarded, if only because they foster the
sole space where a healthy conversation about Rwanda is possible. Not
everyone wants to go back to Rwanda, and certainly not all at once.
The
Rwandan government has come to realise that casting all exiles as
“genocidaires” was clumsy and deeply harmful to its attempt to 
brand itselfas
a business-friendly “Singapore of Africa”. Rwanda needs the exiled Hutu
elites, and not the other way around. Between 2005 and 2011, Rwandans
living abroad have sent more than $500m in remittances
 to support their family and friends back home, including $166m in 2011 alone – a major reason why Rwanda’s economy has risen from the ashes since Kagame became president.
Many
argue that Rwanda’s policy of marginalising its Hutu exiles stems from
the fear that these remittances may create an underground economy, a
potentially destabilising financial force and long-term political danger
that cannot be controlled by the state: Tutsi traders, under the
previous Hutu administration, had bought influence from the allowances
received from their exiled relatives.

Accordingly,
Kagame has begun to – reluctantly – court rich Hutu to extend his web
of influence as he wants to avoid a similar episode at all costs. The government has launched a series of suspicious programmes such as Rwanda DayAgaciro Fund and Come and See, targeting the Rwandan diaspora, “to help dispelrumours among
the refugees, mainly spread by genocide perpetrators that the country
is not peaceful and that refugees are arrested or killed upon
repatriation”.
Enrolling
in the Come and See expedition is free. Former participants have even
reported receiving stipends from the government. In exchange, the
participants who return commit to preach the gospel of Rwanda’s rapid
growth.
To
his credit, Kagame has boosted Rwanda’s international profile, securing
highly sought-after positions for a handful of former Rwandan refugees.
The head of the African Development Bank and the secretary general of the East African Community are both Rwandans, and in April 2013 a Rwandan served as president of the UN Security Council
Another Rwandan was recently appointed to lead the United Nations Peacekeeping Mission in Mali, after successfully leading the African Union-UN mission in Darfur. The country is also said to be eyeing the top job at UN Women.
But although Rwanda has made some impressive strides, such as lifting one million people out of poverty in the past five years, the country remains an autocratic state, and the government has been suspected by foreign governments of supporting attacks and funding hit squads against exiles living abroad.

Understandably enough, many Rwandans dread returning to their home country. But now that the cessation clause has been invoked, that may be what many are forced to do.
Yoletta
Nyange is a Rwandan-born journalist who has lived and worked across
several countries including UK, Venezuela, Tunisia, Ethiopia and the
Sudans, covering international affairs. 
Erasing The Nuba is Nyange’s highly acclaimed debut documentary.
Follow her on Twitter: @Bubulcusibis

The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a “time”, yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine

The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a time, yet It cannot be destroyed => Wolverine

Malcom

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